The 'Women, Life, Freedom' revolt in Iran is an inspiration. I can only express my solidarity for those who have taken to the streets following the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini at the hands of the Guidance Patrol morality police, after she was detained because of how she was dressed (specifically for not 'correctly' covering her head).
Mahsa Amimi |
So many others have been killed since, here's just some of those named so far:
Let us never forget them, or Asra Panahi, a 16 year old killed after refusing to sing an anthem in support of the regime
In a state which polices music and dancing so heavily it is no surprise that these are being forcibly expressed in the protest movement, most notably in Shervin Hajipour’s “For…” which makes a song out of tweets posted by people about what they are fighting for: ''For dancing in the streets, For the fear we feel when kissing a loved one, For my sister, your sister, our sisters...For women, life, freedom
Interesting piece here by Omid Hessamian, 'Shervin Hajipour’s “For…” and the History of Iranian Protest Songs'
Echoes too of the 'dancing is not a crime' movement following the 2018 arrest and jailing of Maedeh Hojabri for instagram posts of her dancing. This piece, 'Dancing Tehran: Iran's Women Make A Stand' features women dancing in defiance and solidariy intercut with videos made by Maedeh Hojabri.
Update December 2022:
Mahsa Amimi remembered in London (Shoreditch)
1 comment:
I wrote about #DancingIsNotACrime here. Paper comes out later this year--sadly still relevant.
https://youtu.be/tDtUUviP3q4
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